To view this issue of cjm online please visit the Taylor & Francis Online website here. Online access to the back catalogue is available free to all Centre for Crime and Justice Studies' members. To find out more about membership click here. In this edition EditorialBy Kevin Stenson and Hazel Croall18 July 2016 The Rise of Virtual Vigilantism: crime reporting since World War IIBy Robert Reiner18 July 2016 The Media, Populism, Public Opinion and CrimeBy Richard Sparks18 July 2016 'What's in it for us?'By David Rose18 July 2016 Fear of Crime and the Media: from perceptions to realityBy Derek Chadee18 July 2016 Just Noise? Newspaper Crime Reporting and the Fear of CrimeBy Martin Roberts18 July 2016 Inside Information: prisons and the mediaBy Joe Levenson18 July 2016 Representing race and crimeBy Colin Webster18 July 2016 Is it a Crime to Seek Refuge?By Keelin Howard18 July 2016 White-Collar Crime in the NewsBy Michael Levi18 July 2016 The Myth of Girl GangsBy Susan Batchelor18 July 2016 Risky BusinessBy Chris Greer18 July 2016 Victimised by the mediaBy Kate Mulley18 July 2016 Putting the Emotion Back into Crime: or how we can start to win the war of the headlinesBy Richard Garside18 July 2016 Our Side of the Fence: an account of a NIMBY campaignBy John Adams18 July 2016 Courts, Cameras and GenocideBy Paul Mason18 July 2016 Tourism, Crime and the MediaBy Paul Brunt18 July 2016 Informing the PublicBy Rob Allen18 July 2016 'Crimewatching': homicide investigations in the age of informationBy Martin Innes18 July 2016 Promoting the Police? The Rise of Police Image WorkBy Rob C Mawby18 July 2016 Crime, Casualty and Consent: making a documentaryBy Mary Currie18 July 2016 Spreading the Word: the media and crime reductionBy Chris Doherty 18 July 2016 6 March 2001